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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
AfterTryingVainly to Stir
Enthusiasm for Palmer,
Georgians Switch to Cox
BY ROGERS WINTER
(Staff Correspondent of The Tournal.) ■
SAN FRANCISCO, July 6.—-Geor-'
gia’s switch on the forty-second bal
lot at the Democratic convention |
helped to push down McAdoo to 427 I
and to push up Cox to On the
forty-third ballot, Cox jumped again |
to 568, while McAdoo slipped again i
to 412.
This was the ballot that told the ■
tale. It gave Governor Cox a ma
jority of the convention. One after |
i another the wavering delegations and '
j split delegations fell off the limb. •
I Florida went solidly over to Cox
after having voted three for Mc-
Adoo and nine for Cox through a
long series of ballots. McAdoo's
eleven votes in the Indiana delega
tion flopped over to Cox and made
it a solid vote of thirty.* Louisiana
went to him solid with twenty votes.
So did Maryland.
The McAdoo supporters everywhere
in the hall realized that the game was?
up. Before the ballot was more than ;
two-thirds finished, it was plain that ■
it wouftf put Cox. in reaching die-1
knee of the two-thirds majority. The
motion by Amidon, of Kansas, to de
clare Cox the nominee Dy acclamation
was made before the result of the
forty-fourth ballot had been an
nounced. The talley clerks were still
working on it. They had experienced
great difficulty in getting the re
sponses of the delegations because
of the whirlwind of applause and
cheers turned loose by Cox enthusi
asts every time a response showed
a gain in his column.
Pandemonium Breaks Loose
When the motion was made, a wild"
pandemonium swept the convention
hall. Chairman Robinson waited sev
eral minutes for it to subside. It
began to look as if shoals of dele
gates were going to leave the build
ing with the mistaken impression
that the motion had carried. He
pounded until he got a semblance of
order and announced that the con
vention had not adjourned, that the
Amidon motion had not been put and
that the result of the forty-fourth
ballot had not been announced. Dele
gates refused to resume thpir seats,
and so did the spectators in the gal
leries, but they suspended momen
tarily the vociferous uproar.
Chairman Robinson then put vhe
motion, and it was carried in a
whirlwind of ayes. The McAdoo floor
leaders did not lift their voices in
opposition. They did not demand a
call of the roll. The jig was up
with them and they knew it, and they
took their medicine. Chairman Rob
inson pounded once more and shout
ed the announcement that Governor
James M. Cox, of Ohio, was the nom
inee by acclamation of the Demo
cratic convention.
Along tow’ard the shank of Monday
afternoon, when 35 • ballots had
been taken without a nomination, and
when it was decided to give Attorney-
General Palmer what Irvin S. Cobb
facetiously described as “the bum’s
rush,’’ those loyal Georgia delegates,
who have stuck to Palmer like a
porous plaster, were accorded the
honor by the Palmer managers of
opening ’ the demonstration and
launching the landslide.
Being a loyal Georgian who en
tertains a fellow feeling for his fel
low statesmen when they find them
selves embarrassed so far, far from
home, the writer was constrained to
clap his hands and emit continuous
shouts to help them out. Any novice
could have seen that they needed
help. They performed magnificently
so far as they were concerned. If
they had been given as much sup
port from the Pennsylvania con
tingent, as they got from The Jour
nal’s correspondent, who did not
support Palmer in the Georgia prim
ary, they would have got farther and
made more noise.
Pennsylvania Balls Down
But the Pennsylvania delegates,
quit them cold. It came at the close
of the thirty-fourth ballot when Mc-
Add was leading and Cox was run-
Adoo was leading and Cox was run-
The loyal Georgia delegates rose in
their section and gave some verses
of the well-known and ribald song
entitled “They, say Mitchell Palmer,
he ain’t got no style, he’s style all
the while, he’s style all the while,
etc.” Blanton Fortson led the bari
tones and Levi Reeves directed the
tenors. Sam Nunn reared back and
opened his lungs like the star per
former at a Sunday school celebra
tion with dinner on the grounds.
Aldine Chambers grabed the Geor
gia banner and started down the
aisle. The loyal Georgia delegates
dropped into lock and manfully fol
lowed, still chanting their refrain
with regard to the style of the at
torney general.
Neyle Colquitt got hold of his
ready rider and put her on his shoul
ders and pranced like a saddle horse
in the show ring. She was the same
girl who rode him to a finish when
Palmer was nominated last Tues
day. Mr. Colquitt does not know
her name and neither do we. She
turns up regularly when the genial
Savannah Democrat is called on to
give his saddle horse stunt in con
vention demonstrations. She carries
a Palmer pennant and wears good <
clothes and rides her steed with
great eclat, dipping and swaying as
he prances the aisles/
The loyal Georgia delegates made
one complete circuit before anybody
joined the procession. Getting a
hunch that they looked lonely from
the viewpoint of the other delegates
and the spectators, Colonel H. H.
Dean laid hold of the Virginia ban
ner and asked permission to tote
it on his shoulder, which was gra
• ciously granted. Some other Geor
gian obtained the same permission
from the Michigan delegation. A
herd of male students from the Uni
versity of California poured into the
hall from a side entrance reserved
for that-purpose and joined the pro
cess!, n. They could make a show
of numbers and create a noise, even
if they could not vote for Palmer.
Their long and cadaverous' and red
headed cheer leader, who had earned
his money in the demonstration
when Palmer was placed in nomi
.nation. a second time rendered a full
day’s service for a full day’s
The band and pipe organ played
“Glory, Glory, Hallelujah,” while the
Georgia delegates gave a vocal ver
sion of “Glory, Glory to Old Geor
gia." Everybody waited for the
Pennsylvania delegates to join the
demonstration, but for some reason
they remaned aloof. The Georgia
delegates did not ask permission to
carry their banner. Evidently, they
figured that it was Pennsylvania’s
business to render at least that much
of a contribution to a- demonstration
given for the benefit of a Pennsyl
vania candidate.
The Georgia delegates did their
part well. They marched and sang
and shouted until they were ex
hausted. The' college students like
wise performed nobly. So did the
pipe organ and the band. In all re
spects it was a monster demonstra
tion except that no delegates partici
-1 pated except the Georgia delegates,
and except that, nobody seemed to
give them assistance from the
i bleachers except your correspondent,
who was moved by feelings above
indicated. ’
Bulge for Balmer
On the thirty-fifth ballot, which
j was taken when the Georgians, re
sumed their seats, and the borrowed
banners were returned and the col
’ legians took their noisy departure
, through the side entrance, Palmer’s
, vote showed quite a buh?e. Virginia
gave him her twenty-four as her
i contribution to "the bum’s rush.”
and a scattering of votes were
. switched from the- Cox and McAdoo
f columns byway of indicating to the
, attorney general that no hard feel
r Ings were cherished against him.
, At the close of this ballot the loyal
t Georgia delgates again gave a march,
and again shouted nobly, though
Colonel Colquitt, being still out of
1 breath, did pot repent his horse show
; performance, but Pennsylvania did
1 show her candidate the courtesy of
joining the procession, and some Vir
ginia delegates condescended to tote
their own banner, as did likewise six
delegates from Missouri who voted
for Palmer on that ballot, and also
a delegate from Porto Rico and an
other from the Philinpines.
When a delegate from Massachu
setts moved that the convention take
a recess until 8:30 and the motion
carried without, objection. every
body was tired and wanted to
stretch their legs.
The sandwiches were gone ayd a
“ booth of near-beer in the refresh-
i ment annex also was gone, and at
I least for the present, all hope of
l making a nomination, the general
i feeling was that another night ses-
I sion or another whole day in San
Francisco would do no harm. Some
I of the delegates quit their hotels
I and made application at the housing
j bureau for accommodations in pri-
I vate homes. They were prepared to
; take up a semi-permanent residence
I in this delightful, albeit expensive
i city.
If Messrs McAdoo, Cox and Palmer
■ had stepped back and given Irvin
■: S. Cobb and Ring Lardner a decent
opportunity, either or both of those
gentlemen might have been rtomi
nated Monday afternoon when they
received, respectively, one and one
half votes each. The demonstration
given in their honor were really
spontaneous and enthusiastic. Ev
erybody whooped and clapped and
the recipients of the complimentary
votes gave appropriate bows of ac
knowledgment. That was one mo
ment when the office was seeking
I the man, and not the man the office,
! but unfortunately the candidates
failed- to rise to the great occasion.
At the conclusion of one of the
ballots Monday afternoon, the exact
number of the same being a matter
of no special consequence, W. T
Anderson, editor of the Macon Tele
graph, bethought himself of the
right idea of expediting matters bv
moving that each low candidate be
dropped from the list until ballot
ing should get down to brass, tacks.
Chairman Robinson held his motion
out'of order, somewhat bluntly. Mr.
Anderson sat down and stayed down
and behaved himself. But not long
afterwards, the motion was
made by Senator t’atwHarrison. of
Mississippi, and Chairman Robinson
entertained it and submitted it to a
roll call vote.
The difference was that Senator
Harrison, being a trained parliamen
tarian, presented the motion in that
exact 'form which enabled the chair
man to entertain, while Editor An
derson missed the formula. The re
sult was the same, however, in each
instance, so far as low candidates
were concerned, since Oklahoma con
tinued to vote for Owen, and West
Virginia continued to vote for Da
vis, and Virginia continued for sev
eral ensuing ballots to pitch in a few
for her favorite son, Senator Carter
Glass. It would have taken some
thing more explosive than Senator
Harrison’s motion to break that
deadlock.
Georgia’s delegation had a wran
glesome day. Editors Clark Howell
and W. T. Anderson Insisted fre
quently on switching to Cox. Messrs.
Hollins Randolph, Clement E. Dun
bar and Aldfne Chambers sat on the
lid in behalf of Palmer, the rank and
file were divided between Cox and
McAdoo and found themselves whip
sawed. They made repeated efforts to
break away from the attorney gen
eral, but the best they could muster
was a tie vote. So they continued to
stick like mustard plaster.
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Mother Flings Baby
From “L” Platform;
Motorman Sees Act
As the elevated train he was driv
ing approached the station at Lib
erty avenue and 110th street, Rich
mond Hill, at 10 o’clock at ight, Mo
tprman George Schlucknvv.i saw a
woman arise . from a bench with a
baby in her arms and walk away
from the tracks toward that edge of
the platform which overlooks the
street forty feet away. As his train
slowed he watched her. and to his
borrow saw her throw the child over
the rail.
The motorman ran from his car
and grabbed the woman, then took
her back while he whistled for the
police. Station attendants ran down
the stairs and found the baby crusn
ed to death on the sidewalk.
Detective Krumel responded to the
whistle and arrested the woman. She
was obviously demented. She gave
her name as Carmelio Quardrio, and
said she was twenty-two and lived
at No. 3611 Avenue D, Brooklyn,
many miles away from where stie
was found. At that address it was
discovered she was 1 really Mrs.
Thomas Grace. Her husband said
she had been failing mentally, and a
week ago had tried to drink a pint
of iodine. . '
- She was held at the Richmond Hill
Station on a charge of homicide. She
has three other small children.
Battle Wound Not an
Accident, Court Holds
LITTLE ROCK. Arie., July 6.—ln
juries received in battle do not&con
stiute an accident, according to the
decision of the Arkansas supreme
court.
Oscar L. Martin, struck by a shell
during the fighting in France, sued
the People’s Mutual Life Insurance
company to collect on an accident
policy.
The court held Americans and Ger
mans were voluntarily engaged In a
conflict with a mutual desire to kill
and injure as many human beings
as possible.
Wilson’s Daughter Asked
Loan of Dime, Was Broke
NEW Y’ORK. —Miss Margaret Wil
son, daughter of the president, dis
covered she was “broke” while rid
ing on a Fifth avenue bus recently
and borrowed 10 cents from a con
ductor to pay her fare, according to
the current issue of Bus Lines, the
bus company’s periodical.
She mounted the bus and proffered
a coin to P. G. Lynch, the conductor.
He looked at it and remarked:
“I’m sorry, miss, but this is a
penny, not a'dime.”
The young woman searched her
purse and then, embarrassed, said:
‘‘l’m afraid I must get off, that
penny is all I have.”
“Remain where you are,” the con
ductor replied, who was unaware of
her identity. “I’ll be glad to lend
you 10 cents.”
She accepted his offer and took his
name. A few days later he was sur
prised to receive a note written on
White House stationery and signed
“Margaret Woodrow Wilson,” thank
ing him for his courtesy and inclos
ing a dime.
Hangs His Wife Out of
Window-in His Sleep
WATERBURY, Conn.—Hearing a
I woman’s screams, police reserves
| stationed at headquarters on strike
: duty rushed out to the street shortly’
■ after midnight, and in an apartment
house across the street saw a woman
hanging from an-open window, white
a man swung her body back and
forth.
The policeman rushed upstairs, ex
pecting every second to hear the
thud of the woman’s body on the
paverqent four stories below.
They arrived in time to rescue the
woman. &he gave her name as Mrs.
Henry J. Gibson, and said the man
was her husband. Turning to place
him under arrest, the police noticed
his eyes were closed and he was in
a dazed condition. At headquarters,
later, a doctor who examined him
said he was suffering from a night
mare and was not aware of what he
i was doing.
“Thriller” Causes Death
BURLINGTON, N. J.—Practicing
' acrobatic stunts while alone in his
room had a tragic ending for Law
rence Speace, sixteen, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Speace, when the boy
was strangled to death by a strap
that tightened around his neck while
he was attempting a new thriller.
Boy friends said he delighted In at
tempting to duplicate any acrobatic
stunt he saw at the movies.
ALLIES SUSPECT -
GOOD FAITH OF
GERMAN ENVOYS
SPA, Belgium, July 6. —Despite
the assurances of Konstantin Fehren
bach, German chancellor, that the
German delegation here was animat
ed by a spirit of good will toward
the allies- and full intentions of
meeting the obligations of the peace
treaty, there was a very apparent un
dertone of suspicion among- the en
tente representatives as they prepar
ed for the second session of the con
ference to open at 2 p. m. today.
The attitude on the part of the en
tente was engendered by what they
considered the unfortunate political
maneuver of the Germans in coming
here without the German minister of
defense, Dr. Gessler, and General von
Seeckt, chief of the German general
staff.
Absence of these two men pre
vented yesterday’s initial meeting
from getting anywhere, as the allies,
led by Premier- Lloyd George, declin
ed to discuss any matter before dis
posal of the disarmament question,
and flatly refused to consider discus
sion of disarmament -without the
presence at the conference of the two
German officials who could undertake
the task of disarmament. 9
Conference Program
The program- of the conference, as
prepared by the allies, calls for dis
cussion, first of disarmament; sec
ond, reparations, and third, the ques
tion of trial of war criminals.
Chancellor Fehrenbach has sum
moned the German minister of de
fense .and ‘the chief of the general
staff, and both were expected to ar
rive, here before today’s conference
opened. It was believed the entire
session would be devoted to discus
sion of disarmament, postponing un
til further meetings other• problems
to be settled.
When, immediately after the open
ing of yesterday’s session, Lloyd
George informed Fehrenbach that
disarmament was to be first dis
cussed. the German chancellor said
Gessler and Von Seeckt* had not ac
companied the German delegation to
Spa, but that minister of Finance
Simons was prepared to discuss the
question informally. Lloyd George,
Millerand and M. de La Croix, the
Belgian prime minister, withdrew
and privately discussed the matter.’
On returning Llloyd George, spokes
man for the allies, told Fehrenbach
the entente would not discuss the
matter informally and moved that
the conference be adjourned until to
day. His motion was adopted.
All representatives expressed re
gret that Spa had been selected for
the conference, owing to the inade
quacy of accommodations. The ho
tels here were prepared to care for
several hundred visitors, while some
what more than 1,400 allied and Ger
man representatives arrived.
There are no baths in the boarding
houses at which many of the vis
itors had to take lodgings, and the
hotels have only two or three each.
The public baths were turned over
to the journalists who have arrived
several hundred strong from all
parts of the world.
Oklahoma Loses Money
By Many Tax Evaders
OKLAHOMA ClTY.—Frank C. Car
ter, state auditor, sas that, evasion
of the personal Income tax law by the
formation of corporations costs Okla
homa hundreds of thousands of dol
lars a year. At the next session of
the legislature, Mr. Carter states,
efforts will be made to amend the tax
law to make corporations pay taxes
upon their earnings.
“When a man’s business begins to
thrive so that he has to pay a big
sum for income tax to the state, he
takes in his wife and one of his em
ployes and forms a corporation." Mr.
Carter declares. “The next year the
corporation does not declare a divi
dend and there is no record to show
what is .the personal Income of the
stockholders. The stockholders
could be prosecuted for embezzlement
if he should be detected .using the un
divided profits for his personal needs,
but it is hard to discover him. The
only remedy for the state is to
amend the law so as to tax the
earnings of corporations.”
Fred McCulloch’s one
e
cornfield brought in $4,928
What a well-known corn grower
’ sa y s a b° ul: weMU*
j IT AST year a single field on Fred
I McCulloch’s lowa farm yielded
an 88-bushel-per-acre crop, total-
* $4,928.* Fred McCulloch was on
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No matter how hard the work is on
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Palmer, Once a Fighting
Quaker, Ended as Quaking
Fighter, States Irvin Cobb
New Party Will Be Formedi
He Says, of Newspaper
Men Who Had to Attend
Both Conventions
BY IRVIN S. COBB
I SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., July 6.
One of the tragedies of daybreak
Monday had to do with the untime
ly fate of A. Mitchell Palmer, the
! lighting Quaker but better known at
this time of writing as the Quaker
j fighter. As early as Saturday aft
ernoon it became apparent to unprej
iced bystanders that the chief re
sult of sticking up all of these
twelve-sheet posters of Quaker Mitch
was to get him confused in the popu
lar mind with a brand of • breakfast
food.
Through Sunday his boom failed
rapidly, but not until the first pink
streaks showed in the east did hope
die entirely in the Palmeran breast,
i saw Chief Mourner Frank Garvan re
| turning from the cemetery after the
interment. In accordance with a
j quaint old Etruscan custom, he was
| carrying a tear jug—at least it look
ed at a distance, like a tear jug. I’ll
swear it was a jug alright.
On the other hand, W. J. McCombs
fairly radiated cheerfulness at the
breafast hour. I didn’t know which
favorite son Mr. McCombs was for,
but I could guess what favorite son
(in law) he was against. Mr. Mc-
Combs did not figure so actively in
this convention as he did in one
which occurred about eight years ago,
but he enjoyed the distinction which,
in any gathering, is accorded the lone
survivor of a once notable cause.
How the Colonels Stood
Colonel Harvey is over in the ene
my’s camp. Colonel Watterson is
outside the breastworks, too. Colo
nel House, having likewise joined the
lost battalion—by request—is far
away somewhere fussing with the
discard; but Mr. McCombs, the last
rose of a Wilsonian summer, arrived
last week, coming, as one might
shrewdly divine, not with the in
tention of praising Caesar, but pre-
Man Severely Bitten
In Battle With Dog
Collapses From Pain
Roswell Archer, twenty-two, son
i of Theodore F. Archer, a real estate
’ operator and auctioneer, of No. 388
Hillside avenue, Jamaica, was se
; verely bitten during a battle with a
i St. Bernard dog which attacked him
I while he was in the rear yard of a
; house at Grand and Hillside ave
: nues, Hollis. Archer fought the dog
I twenty minutes and finally drove it
' off.
Young Archer was seeking a house
! on which he intended placing one of
his father’s signs. He left his auto-
= mobile and walked into a yard where
i he saw a woman working among
some flowers. Just after he closed
i the gate the dog sprang at him.
Before Archer could make a de
fensive move the animal burled its
teeth deep in the young man’s left
hip. The suddenness of the attack
carried Archer off his feet. As he
: lay on the ground the animal rushed
at him again. With his arms cover
ing his face, Archer tried to-drive
the dog away.
Almost insane with pain from his
• wounds, Archer crawled toward a
: stick of wood he saw about four feet
■ away. He finally reached it and was
i about to strike at the dog when it
' again rushed at him, this time bury
ing its teeth in Archer’s stomach.
The woman screamed at the dog, b'ut
it did not heed her cries. Archer
finally reached the street and his
automobile. He drove to his home
where he collapsed from loss of
blood. The dog, which the police
say is owned by George Gottlieb of
pared to give his hearty private in
dorsement to any movement looking
towards the burial of any or all
members of the ruling dynasty,
As the forenoon wore on and the
twenty-third ballot got laboriously
under way, your correspondent .was
moved to emphasize his opinion, as
expressed in his Sunday dispatches,
that one main trouble with the Dem
ocrats is that there aren’t enough
of them in the country at large and
another main trouble is that there
are entirely too many of them in
the convention.
What we need is fewer delegates
in the summer and more voters in
the fall. It is a mistake to open
up a mad-house with nearly 1,100
inmates and not a single competent
keeper on the job.- Any experi
enced baseball manager will tell you
speed is worth little unless with it
you have control. What applies to
big league pitchers applies with
equal force' to big league politics.
Where the Difference Lies
One outstanding difference between
the Republican convention and the
Democratic convention here is the
same difference that would be
remarked between a deaf mute home
and a lunatic asylum. So far as my
recollection serves, but two motions
were made from the floor at the Re
publican convention. One was made
by Senator Wadsworth when, in re
sponse to a cue from the chair, he
arose in his place in the New York
delegation to suggest in a statesman
like manner that the convention take
a recess until evening, and the other
motion was made by a white dele
gate from Georgia in the direction
<\f his right hip pocket, during the
I row over the election of a national
i committeeman from his state.
; But, from the middle of last week
| until today, the Democratic conven
[ tion has been in almost constant ac
tion. •
It was circular motion though.
The Republicans operated a steam
roller. The Democrats have ridden
on a merry-go-round.
You can have a lot of fun and kill
a lot of time riding on a merry-go
round, but you don’t seem to go any
where in particular.
There is certainly need for a third
party in the country. It will be
largely recruited from the ranks of
the newspaper men who have at
tended both conventions.
(Copyright, 1920, by Bell Syn., Inc.)
Waterbury City Guards
Called Into Action
WATERBURY, Conn.-—The Water
bury City guard, which has been on
police reserve duty since the brass
mill strikes began, was called into
action recently. Strikers in Oak
ville, a suburb, refused to disband
and the guardsmen, with bayonets
fixed, dispersed them.
One hundred strikers were holding
a parade led by two men on bicycles
and two women. Five of the leaders
were arrested, one of them accused
of stoning the police. Later five
girls on picket duty at the plant of
the Scovill -Manufacturing company
were seized, charged with interfer
ing with women on their way to
work.
Since the attempt to blow up the
home of John H. Goss, of the Scovill
.Manufacturing company, the resi
dences of several manufacturers and
city officials have been under special
guarffi 1
Divorced Man Dead From
Bullet, Wife Wounded
MORRISVILLE, Vt. Levi L.
Bashaw and his divorced wife were
found lying on the floor of Bashaw’s
restaurant recently, the man dead
and the woman seriously wounded
by a revolver bullet.
The police believe Bashaw shot his
wife and then took hi s own life. Mrs.
Bashaw, friends said, obtained a di
vorce from her husband some time
ago and only recently returned to
Morrisville.
Grand avenue near Millside avenue,
Hollis, was seized by the health de
partment.
THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1920.
Savannah Boasts
First J. M. Cox
Club in Georgia
'SAVANNAH, Ga., July. 6.—The
first James M. Cox club in Georgia
was organized this morning. Charles
G. Edwards, who served with Cox
in congress, is the moving spirit in
it.
The nomination has been received
With marked enthusiasm in Savan
nah.
ISENDNO MONEY
■ men and boys
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It’s a cinch
. to figure out
wh y Camels sell
Camels are unlike any ciga
rette y° u ever smoked—that’s
Kw Bl why they’re a real cigarette
‘fl revelation! ■
J /You should know why Camels
-W <are 80 unusua b so refreshing, so i
satisfying. First, quality— sec- •
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f Compare Camels
puff -by - puff with
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pri cel
j il yH
Camels are aold everywhere in scientifically ’ ,nUi,
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orfan packages (200cigarettes) in a glassine
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•r when you travel - ~
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C.
Complaining, Fretful Women
iW ARE NOT TO BLAME—
THEY ARE SICK
?)) \ \ I - Tlie sufferings of many women
r xWllMv \ 11 1 I ' f'l are enough to make them careless
Jt 1 I| I l /Z and querulous. In more or less
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SOLD EVERYWHERE TABLETS OR LIQUID
TUBERCULOSIS
11 wns when physicians said
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on himself, and discovered the
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irCN-ECZEItA E
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1 Ea CANNADAY
22.54 Pa»-?c Square SEDALIA, MO.
Third Ceold do • b«tt«r act »h»n to Mnd thta notice «o M«M
IKj’ V3.-.51. E.C JgJin, r-.'o. poor autfarar of
To File Coca-Cola
Briefs September 1
WILMINGTON, Del., July
Judge Morris in the injunction pro
ceedings brought in the United
States district court for Delaware
by the Coca-Cola Bottling companies
of Chattanooga, Tenn., against the
Coca-Cola company of this city, has
fixed September 1 for filing of briefs
and making reply.
Some women spoil a lot of nature’s
fine work by trying to turn wheat
into bread.